MxMo: Limit One

For this month’s Mixology Monday, I decided to highlight a cocktail called the Diamondback, which I first saw in the September/October 2007 issue of Imbibe magazine.

Our taskmaster, Rick, demands we tax our livers with drinks that “contain at least 3oz of 80-proof spirit or have less than 1/2oz of non-spiritness.” No Rick! Don’t throw me in the briar patch! Anything but the briar patch!

The recipe in Imbibe credited the Diamondback as Murray Stenson’s variant of a recipe that first appeared in the book Bottom’s Up, by Ted Saucier. Saucier’s volume calls the drink the Diamondback Lounge and credits it to the Lord Baltimore Hotel, in Baltimore, Md. The hotel itself is still around, but I see nothing about the Diamondback Lounge.

When I first mixed this drink, I realized immediately that it had a strong bite and so I understandably assumed that both the drink and the lounge were named after this charming critter:

Turns out, I was probably wrong.

As I was researching this post, I learned that an animal called the diamondback terrapin is the state reptile of Maryland. Sports fans should recognize the terrapin as the mascot of the University of Maryland, and college-journo geeks (I know you’re out there) will remember that the U of M student publication is the Diamondback. So, the real culprit for my achin’ head? This beast:

Man, I thought it was a snake fucking me up. Turns out it was a freakin’ turtle. I’m so embarrassed.

This is okay, although it’s a little mild, and I don’t think the mint adds anything.

Diamondback, from Imbibe

1-1/2 oz. rye whiskey

3/4 oz. applejack

3/4 oz. green Chartreuse

Ice cubes

Garnish: Cherry

Technique: Stir ingredients with ice in a mixing glass. Strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish.

photo by Jennifer Hess

You’ll note from the photo above that I forgot the garnish. A cherry makes more sense to me here than mint does, anyway. This is a better drink than the version with yellow Chartreuse, since the green has more backbone and brings more botanical notes to the drink. Still, I think equal parts applejack and Chartreuse result in a drink that’s a tad too sweet for my tastes.

Hence, if you’ll forgive me…

Diamondback Terrapin

1-1/2 oz. rye whiskey

1 oz. applejack

1/2 oz. green Chartreuse

Build in an old-fashioned glass over ice. Stir until chilled. Garnish with your own best wishes or deepest fears.

Awwww! But da widdle tuwtle is so cute!
But seriously, I love a post like this. It provides me with a drink to try that entirely uses ingredients that I have too much of on hand, and no favorite way (yet) to drink up the surplus!

i see you hedged your bets with the higher proofage diamondback by serving it in an old-fashioned glass!!! that bonded applejack is awesome, sure wish we could get that regularly in seattle….great great post, nice pics, funny, and a tasty looking beverage… nicely done.

Back in the pre-1930s Maryland, there was a delicacy called Terrapin Stew, which was renowned in the finer Baltimore hotels. It was a delicate stew with broth and cream and a wee bit of good Rye and tender terrapin meat.

As time progressed it became harder and harder to find good Terrapin Stew, and by Prohibition the “real thing” had become rare, along with the traditional drinks which went with terrapin stew, to wit, real rye — perhaps an old-fashioned or other rye cocktail.

It was a traditional and timeless classic of a food and drink pairing, and most people nowawdays don’t even know it existed.

I’m not claiming that’s the source of the above-mentioned cocktail’s name, but it provides a certain amount of background to your raw data.